Greatest I am wrote:ReliStuPhD wrote:Greatest I am wrote:You did not list any that I recognized and that is why I asked for an item or two.
Just because you don't recognize them, it doesn't mean they're not objective. But if you want to get back to a specific example, let's go with "Unjustified killing is wrong."
Is determining unjustifiability not a subjective judgement.
Seems to me that an objective morality would not need a subjective judgement.
Well, I wouldn't say that it's subjective, since I think there are other objective moral tenets that help us make the judgment. But no, even if determining what was "justified" was subjective, it would not mean the tenet was subjective, insofar as we would still categorize unjustified killing as wrong, even if we had a hell of a hard time determining if it was justified.
By the way, "justified" basically just means there's a good reason for it. I might even be willing to go a bit farther and say the reason doesn't have to stand up to the scrutiny of others, so long as it's not "I killed him for no reason at all."